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Saroyan prize awarded for '05

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  • Saroyan prize awarded for '05

    Fresno Bee (California)
    July 21, 2005, Thursday FINAL EDITION

    Saroyan prize awarded for '05


    "The King of California" by Mark Arax and Rick Wartzman and "The
    Laments" by George Hagen were the winners in the 2005 William Saroyan
    International Prize for Writing announced Tuesday at Stanford
    University in Palo Alto.

    "The King of California" won in the nonfiction category and "The
    Laments" in the fiction category. The winners will be award a $12,500
    prize. There were 125 entries in both categories.

    Arax is a reporter for the Los Angeles Times who lives in Fresno;
    Wartzman, who lives in Los Angeles, is the paper's business editor.

    "The King of California" is about J.G. Boswell and his cotton
    business in the San Joaquin Valley.

    Hagen lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., and "The Laments" is his first novel.
    It is about a family and a kidnapping and how that influences lives.

    The writing prize was established to encourage new and emerging
    writers and is awarded annually for newly published works in fiction
    and nonfiction. The prize is awarded through Stanford University
    Libraries in partnership with the William Saroyan Foundation.

    It is named after Fresno native William Saroyan, who won the Pulitzer
    Prize in 1940 for his play "The Time of Your Life" and an Academy
    Award in 1943 for his screenplay "Human Comedy." Saroyan was the
    fourth child of Armenian immigrants. He rose from poverty to literary
    prominence in the 1930s with stories such as "The Daring Young Man on
    the Flying Trapeze," "My Name is Aram" and "My Heart's in the
    Highlands."

    Saroyan, who died in 1981, wanted to establish a writing prize to
    encourage and perpetuate the art he loved. He set up the William
    Saroyan Foundation in 1966. Professors, business executives and
    government officials have served on the foundation's board. In 1990,
    the trustees offered Stanford University the assembled Saroyan
    Literary Collection with provisions that would safeguard Saroyan's
    work.
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